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How many calories do you burn doing squats?

Updated on May 28, 2026 (8 days ago) by the Protéalpes team of pharmacists

The squat is a high-intensity exercise that simultaneously engages the quadriceps, glutes, hamstrings, and core.

This is a fundamental exercise in both weight training and fitness, and it ranks among the most effective bodyweight exercises for burning calories. On average, a bodyweight squat burns about 0.50 kcal per repetition, or approximately 50 kcal for 100 squats.

This estimate is based on the work of Nakagata et al., the most accurate scientific reference available on the energy cost of a squat per repetition.

The Protéalpes calculator uses this data, supplemented by the MET values from the 2024 Compendium of Physical Activities, to estimate your energy expenditure in three ways: per session, per number of repetitions, or per calorie goal.

If "yes," a more conservative average is applied (lower effective load over the total duration).
Disclaimer: This is a contextual estimate, not an exact measurement. Accuracy depends on tempo, amplitude, load, intensity, and recovery times.
Estimated calories (session)
49 calories
Plausible range: 43–54 kcal
Assumption: bodyweight squats, MET value (Compendium 2024 — ~3.0 "general" MET), "normal" tempo, including rest periods (conservative estimate).
References: Adult Compendium of Physical Activities (2024); Nakagata et al. (2022) for the cost per repetition using body weight.
Calories per serving chart
Duration Calories (range)
5 min 14–18 kcal
10 min 28–36 kcal
15 min 43–54 kcal
20 min 57–72 kcal
25 min 71–91 kcal
30 min 85–109 kcal
35 min 100–127 kcal
40 min 114–145 kcal
45 min 128–163 kcal
50 min 142–181 kcal
55 min 157–199 kcal
60 min 171–217 kcal
Calories vs. Duration Chart
Calories Duration (range)
50 kcal 14–18 min
100 kcal 28–35 min
150 calories 41–53 min
200 kcal 55–70 min
250 calories 69–88 min
300 calories 83–105 min
350 calories 97–123 min
400 calories 110–141 min
450 calories 124–158 min
500 kcal 138–176 min
Squats Chart → Calories
Squats Calories (range)
10 squats 4–6 kcal
20 squats 8–12 kcal
30 squats 13–17 kcal
40 squats 17–23 kcal
50 squats 21–29 kcal
60 squats 25–35 kcal
70 squats 29–41 kcal
80 squats 34–46 kcal
90 squats 38–52 kcal
100 squats 42–58 kcal
150 squats 63–87 kcal
200 squats 84–116 kcal
300 squats 126–174 kcal
400 squats 168–232 kcal
500 squats 210–290 kcal
600 squats 252–348 kcal
700 squats 294–406 kcal
800 squats 336–464 kcal
900 squats 378–522 kcal
1,000 squats 420–580 kcal

How many calories do you burn when doing squats?

The energy expenditure during a squat session depends on three factors:

  1. body weight;
  2. the intensity of the exercise;
  3. the selected calculation method (duration or repetitions).

How does the iterative estimation method work?

The study by Nakagata et al. (2022) measured an energy cost of 0.50 ± 0.14 kcal per bodyweight squat, with a 95% confidence interval ranging from 0.42 to 0.58 kcal per squat. This protocol involved slow, controlled squats performed by young men in good physical condition.

The formula is simple:

Calories = number of squats × 0.50

Here are a few concrete examples:

  • 50 squats ≈ 25 kcal (range: 21–29 kcal);
  • 100 squats ≈ 50 kcal (range: 42–58 kcal);
  • 200 squats ≈ 100 kcal (range: 84–116 kcal).

Note: This repetition-based method is more accurate than the MET estimates arbitrarily converted to “calories per squat” found on many online calculators. It is based on a direct measurement of oxygen consumption during exercise.

How does the session duration-based estimate work?

When you know the duration of your workout rather than the exact number of repetitions, the calculator switches to the ACSM formula based on MET values:

kcal = MET × 3.5 × weight (kg) ÷ 200 × duration (min)

The 2024 Compendium of Physical Activities provides the following reference values:

Type of squatMETkcal/min (70 kg)Workload profile
Body weight, gentle pace3,0≈ 3,7General, Warm-up, Beginner
Bodyweight, slow and controlled (≈ 10 reps/min)5,4≈ 6,6Controlled pace, strength training
Body weight, intense / continuous6,0≈ 7,4HIIT, circuit training, CrossFit
Weighted squats (back squat, goblet squat)10.0 to 19.0*12.3 – 23.3Varies depending on the 1RM percentage and the protocol

*Studies by Robergs et al. (2007) and Reis et al. (2017) show that the caloric expenditure during weighted squats can range from 10 to 19 kcal/min, depending on the relative load, time under tension, and rest intervals.

Warning: For weighted squats (back squat, goblet squat, kettlebell squat), the estimates are significantly less reliable. The energy expenditure depends on the %1RM, range of motion, tempo, and rest periods. The calculator therefore provides intensity scenarios (light, moderate, heavy) rather than a single value.

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Brûleurs de Loups SM Caen Montpellier Hérault Rugby Servette Valence Romans Drôme Rugby FC Grenoble Rugby Aviron Bayonnais Grenoble Foot Stade de Reims LOSC DAX Rugby RC Vannes

How many squats does it take to burn 100, 200, or 500 calories?

The calculator also allows you to work backward: start with a calorie expenditure goal and estimate the number of squats needed to reach it.

The inverse formula is:

Number of squats = target calories ÷ 0.50

ObjectiveCentral estimateLow–high range
50 kcal≈ 100 squats86–119 squats
100 kcal≈ 200 squats172–238 squats
200 kcal≈ 400 squats345–476 squats
500 kcal≈ 1,000 squats862–1,190 squats

These figures apply to the standard bodyweight squat. Explosive variations, such as the jump squat, increase energy expenditure per repetition, while a half-squat with a reduced range of motion decreases it.

Additional information: Burning 500 calories through squats alone requires a significant amount of effort. In practice, combining squats with other exercises (lunges, mountain climbers, burpees) in a HIIT circuit helps distribute the effort across the entire body and reduce localized fatigue in the legs.

Are squats effective for weight loss?

Squats don't burn as many calories per minute as a brisk run or a set of burpees.

For a 70-kg person, a high-intensity bodyweight squat burns about 7.4 kcal/min, compared to 12 to 14 kcal/min for brisk jogging or HIIT burpees.

On the other hand, the squat offers two key benefits for promoting fat loss in the long term:

  • Building lower-body muscle (quadriceps, glutes) boosts your basal metabolic rate. The more muscle mass you have, the more calories your body burns at rest, day after day.
  • The EPOC (excess post-exercise oxygen consumption) effect of strength training sessions keeps calorie expenditure high for several hours after exercise, especially when squats are performed with heavy weights or at high intensity.

Squats are therefore part of a comprehensive strategy that combines strength training, cardio, and a balanced diet to create a sustainable calorie deficit.

Key takeaway: The number of calories burned during squats tells only part of the story. The most powerful effect of squats on weight loss comes from building muscle mass, increasing your resting metabolic rate, and boosting thermogenesis —all benefits that accumulate week after week with regular practice.

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Scientific references and sources

1 Estimating the Energy Cost of Bodyweight Resistance Exercise Using a Multistage Exercise Test by



2 Energy expenditure during isolated resistance exercises at low to high intensities by



3 2024 Adult Compendium of Physical Activities: A third update of the energy costs of human activities by



4 Energy Expenditure During Bench Press and Squat Exercises by



Our other calculators

An article written by

Aymeric Mendez & Guillaume Lavastre

Guillaume and Aymeric are the founders of Protéalpes. They are also pharmacists with a passion for nutrition and sport.

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